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Glossary of anarchism

The following is a list of terms specific to anarchists. Anarchism is a political and social movement which advocates voluntary association in opposition to authoritarianism and hierarchy.

A edit

Acracy
The negation of rule or "government by none". While "anarchy" refers to the absence of a hierarchical society-organizing power principle, "acracy" refers to the absence of coercion; the condition of acracy is one of voluntary order. Derived from the Greek α- [no] and κρατία [system of government].
Adhocracy
A form of organic organization according to which different parts of an organization are temporarily assembled to meet the requirements of that particular point in time.[1]
Affinity group
A small non-hierarchical collective of individuals who collaborate on direct action via consensus decision-making.[2]
Anarch
Coined by Ernst Jünger, this refers to the ruler (i.e. individual) in a state of anarchy analogous to the monarch in a state of monarchy, a conception influenced by Max Stirner's notion of the sovereign individual.[3]
Anarchism without adjectives
A form of anarchism which does not declare affiliation with any specific subtype of anarchism (as may be suffixed to anarcho- or anarcha-), instead positioning itself as pluralistic, tolerant of all anarchist schools of thought.[4]
Anarchy
Derived from the Ancient Greek ἀν (without) + ἄρχειν (to rule) "without archons," "without rulers".[5]
Anomie
Social disorder and civil war in an absence of government, used to separate anarchy as in social order and absence of government.
Ansoc
Clipping of anarcho-socialism and/or anarcho-socialist used in informal discourse, particularly in blogs or other internet forums.
Anti-systemic library
A library which is not organised hierarchically and that has no catalogue. The concept is influenced by the ideas of the Situationists.
Autonomism
A set of radical left-wing political movements in Western Europe which emerged in the late 20th century.
Archon
A Greek word meaning "ruler"; the absence of archons and archy (rule) defines a state of anarchy. Derived from the Ancient Greek άρχων, pl. άρχοντες.

B edit

Biennio rosso
The "two red years" of political agitation, strikes and land occupation by Italian workers in 1919 and 1920.[6]
Black anarchism
A political philosophy primarily of African-Americans, opposed to what it sees as the oppression of people of colour by the white ruling class through the power of the state.[7]
Black bloc
An affinity group, or cluster of affinity groups that assembles during protests, demonstrations, or other forms of direct action. Black blocs are noted for the distinctive all-black clothing worn by members to conceal their identity and for their intentional defiance of state property law.[8][9]
Bourse du Travail
A distinctively French form of working class organization of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, bourses du travail promoted mutual aid, education, and self-organization amongst their members.[10]

C edit

Consensus decision-making
A participatory decision making process for collectives that seeks the resolution or mitigation of minority objections (according to the principle of inclusivity) as well as the agreement of the majority of participants.[11][12][13]
Cost the limit of price
A maxim coined by individualist anarchist Josiah Warren (1798–1874) to express a normative conception of the labor theory of value—that is, that the price of a good or service should never exceed its cost.[14]
Counter-economics
Abbreviation of "counter-establishment economics", a concept in agorist theory of the use and advocacy of black and grey markets and the underground economy to erode the moral authority of and the perceived necessity for the state.

D edit

…When a revolutionary situation develops, counter-institutions have the potential of functioning as a real alternative to the existing structure and reliance on them becomes as normal as reliance on the old authoritarian institutions. This is when counter-institutions constitute dual power.

Dual power is a state of affairs in which people have created institutions that fulfill all the useful functions formerly provided by the state. The creation of a general state of dual power is a necessary requirement for a successful revolution…

Love and Rage, Love & Rage Revolutionary Anarchist Federation New York Local Member Handbook; June, 1997.[15]

Dispute resolution organization (DRO)
A private (or possibly cooperative) organization specialized in resolving disputes that would arise in an anarchical society (similar to a PDA).[16]
Diversity of tactics
A united front of solidarity between participants who disagree on specific choice of tactics. For instance, during a protest action, demonstrators can create zones with varying degrees of tactical risk, rather than imposing a single code.[17]
Dual power
The concept of revolution through the creation of "counter-institutions" in place of and in opposition to state power.[15] Used in anarcho-communist discourse, it is distinct from the earlier use of the phrase by non-anarchist communists such as Vladimir Lenin.
Dumpster diving
Physically searching through the discarded belongings in a dumpster or other trash receptacle, with the intention of salvaging useful material such as food or information.[18]

E edit

Epistemological anarchism
A theory in the philosophy of science advanced by Paul Feyerabend which holds that there are no useful and exception-free rules governing the progress of science, and that the pragmatic approach is a Dadaistic "anything goes" attitude of methodological pluralism.[19]

F edit

Food rescue
The practice of retrieving edible food that would otherwise go to waste and distributing it to those in need.[20]
Free school
A decentralized network in which skills, information and knowledge are shared with neither the social hierarchy nor the institutional environment of formal schooling.
Free soviets
Following the Russian Revolution, the concept of workers' councils (soviets) that were self-governing and free from party control.[21]
Freeganism
An anti-consumerist lifestyle according to which participants attempt to restrict their consumption of natural resources and participation in the conventional economy to using salvaged and discarded goods.[22]
Freigeld
A monetary system in the Freiwirtschaft theory, according to which units of currency retain their value or lose it at a certain rate, making inflation and profiting from interest impossible. Freigeld is a German phrase with the literal meaning "free money".[23]

G edit

Give-away shop
Second-hand stores where all goods are free. An example of a gift economy.[24]
Guerrilla gardening
Nonviolent direct action whereby disused plots are converted to gardens without seeking the permission of the putative property owners.[25] Related: squatting.

H edit

Haymarket Martyrs
The seven anarchists tried and executed for the murder of a Chicago policeman during the Haymarket affair.[26]
Haymarket Tragedy
See Haymarket Martyrs
Hierarchy
See social hierarchy
Horizontalidad (also Horizontalism)
A form of non-hierarchical social organization which utilises direct democracy and consensus decision-making.[27]

I edit

 
Interior of the Left Bank Books infoshop in Seattle, Washington, in 2006. An infoshop is a nexus for information exchange among anarchists.
Illegalism
A doctrine which rejects all moral obligations and governmental law in favour of the satisfaction of one's own desires.[28] Pioneered by the Bonnot Gang in France and heavily influenced by the individualist anarchist philosophy of Max Stirner.[28]
Immediatism
A philosophy which demands the embracing of immediate social interactions with people as a means of countering the antisocial consequences of consumerist capitalism.[29]
Individual reclamation (reprise individuelle)
A form of direct action that advocates for criminal acts in service of a cause. Influenced by Bolshevik theory.[30]
Infoshop
A space (often a social center) that serves as a node for anarchists involved with radical movements and countercultures for trading publications (typically books, zines, stickers and posters), meeting and networking with similar individuals and groups.[31] The primary directive of an infoshop is the dissemination of information.[32] Related: zine library.
Invisible dictatorship
A vanguardist organisation of revolutionaries first proposed by Mikhail Bakunin.[33]

J edit

Jurisdictional arbitrage
Exploitation of differences in national laws and regulations[34] to maximise liberty. Related: dynamic geography, panarchism.

K edit

Kabouters
Dutch anarchists influenced by Peter Kropotkin who sought to promote awareness of alternatives to authoritarian and capitalist solutions to social problems in 1960s Amsterdam.[35]

L edit

Land and liberty
A slogan expressing the desire of freedom from landowners originally used by the revolutionary leaders of the Mexican Revolution. Spanish: Tierra y Libertad, Russian: Земля и Воля Zemlya i Volya.
Law of equal liberty
A doctrine asserting that each individual has the right to assert their fullest liberty to act so long as it does not extend them greater liberty than any other individual. Named by Herbert Spencer.
Lifestylism
Anarchists who prioritize cultural and identity protest over class struggle politics. Associated with Murray Bookchin's 1995 essay in pejorative reference to anarcho-primitivists, poststructural anarchists, and individualists/egoists.[36]
Lois scélérates
A pejorative term for a set of French laws passed during 1893–1894 restricting the freedom of the anarchist press in the aftermath of an outbreak of propaganda of the deed.

M edit

 
The Modern School in New York City, circa 1911–12. Anarchist philosopher and radical historian Will Durant stands on the steps with his pupils.
Makhnovshchina
Mass movement to establish anarchist-communism in Ukraine, led by the Ukrainian anarchist revolutionary Nestor Makhno (1888–1934) and his followers in the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine.
Modern School
American schools formed in the early 20th century based on the ideas of educator and anarchist Francesc Ferrer i Guàrdia and modelled after his Escuela Moderna.[37]
Mutual aid
The voluntary reciprocal exchange of resources and services for mutual benefit. Related: gift economy, voluntarism.

N edit

Netwar
Low-intensity social conflict employing a network structure for organisational control and communication.[38] Related: Security culture.
Non-aggression Principle (NAP, also Non-aggression Axiom)
A prohibition against the initiation of force, or the threat of force, against persons or property (usually referred to as aggression or coercion).


P edit

Panarchy (political philosophy)
Participatory politics
Polycentric law
Post-left
Prefigurative politics
Primitivist
Used interchangeably with anarcho-primitivist.
Propaganda of the deed
Property is theft!
Provo
Punk house


R edit

Radical cheerleading
Really Really Free Market
A free market based on the principle of gift economics whereby participants bring gifts and resources to share with one another, without money being exchanged.[39] Related: participatory economics, voluntary association.
Refusal of work
Responsible autonomy
Revolutionary spontaneity
Rewilding
Reprise individuelle

S edit

Samizdat—the production of literature banned by the former communist governments of eastern Europe; the term is a play on the term for the Soviet state press, and translates to "self-publishing." Throughout the greater part of the twentieth century, the best literature, philosophy, and history in the Soviet Union and its satellite states was copied by photo-reproduction and distributed through underground channels—just as it is here in the United States today.

Rolling Thunder, Issue 4[40]

Seasteading
The creation of permanent dwellings on the ocean, analogous to homesteading on land. A seastead is a structure meant for permanent occupation on the ocean.[41] Related to Permanent Autonomous Zones.[42]
Security culture
Secrecy practiced by an affinity group which engages in illegal activities, and its precautions to avoid surveillance or infiltration by law enforcement.[43] Related: direct action, netwar
Social center
Social ecology
Social hierarchy
Social revolution
Somatherapy
Spokescouncil
Spontaneous order
Street reclamation
Swaraj

T edit

TANSTAAFL
Acronym coined by libertarian science fiction writer Robert A. Heinlein in The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress for "There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch". Used to express scepticism towards socialist economics.[44]
Tragic Week
The name given to a series of violent confrontations between the Spanish army and the anarchist-backed working classes in Catalunyan cities from July 25-August 2, 1909.[45]
Trial of the thirty
A show trial in 1894 in Paris aimed at legitimizing the lois scélérates passed in 1893–1894 against the French anarchist movement and at restricting press freedom by proving the existence of an effective association between anarchists.[46] French: Procès des trente


V edit

Veganarchism
The political philosophy of veganism (more specifically animal liberation) and anarchism, creating a combined praxis as a means for social revolution.
Voluntarism
The use of or reliance on voluntary action to maintain an institution, carry out a policy, or achieve an end.[47]
Voluntaryism
A political philosophy which advocates voluntary association as the foundation of society, and opposes coercion and aggression.

W edit

 
The abolition of wage slavery has been a stated goal of unions like the Industrial Workers of the World.
Wage slavery
A term which asserts a similarity between slavery—the ownership and control of one person by another—and wage labour.[48]
Workers' self-management
A form of workplace decision-making in which the workers rather than professional managers decide on issues related to the operation of the business.[49]


Z edit

Zenarchy
Compound of zen and "archy". The social order which arises from meditation. As a doctrine, zenarchism is the belief that "universal enlightenment" is a prerequisite to the abolition of the state.[50]
Zine
A low-circulation, non-commercial periodical of original or appropriated texts and images. Usually reproduced via photocopier on a variety of colored paper stock.
Zine library
A repository of zines and other associated artifacts, such as small press books. Zine libraries are typically run on a minimal budget, and have a close association with infoshops and other forms of DIY culture and independent media.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Alvesson, Mats (1995). Management of Knowledge-Intensive Companies. Walter De Gruyter Inc. p. 93. ISBN 978-3110128659.
  2. ^ Recipes for Disaster, p.28-31
  3. ^ Warrior, Waldgänger, Anarch: An essay on Ernst Jünger's concept of the sovereign individual 2008-06-09 at the Wayback Machine by Abdalbarr Braun. Retrieved 22 December 2007.
  4. ^ Esenwein, George Richard "Anarchist Ideology and the Working Class Movement in Spain, 1868–1898" [p. 135]
  5. ^ Anarchy Merriam-Webster's Online dictionary
  6. ^ Macdonald, Hamish (1998). Mussolini and Italian Fascism. Trans-Atlantic Publications. p. 17. ISBN 978-0748733866.
  7. ^ Daquan, Bridger (2007). Delusion Addiction. Trafford Publishing. p. 118. ISBN 978-1425117696.
  8. ^ "Blocs, Black and Otherwise". Crimethinc.com. CrimethInc. 20 November 2003. Retrieved 2008-08-05.
  9. ^ ACME Collective, A communique from one section of the black bloc of N30 in Seattle.
  10. ^ Ogg, Frederic Austin (1917). Economic development of modern Europe. New York: The Macmillan company. p. 464. OCLC 603770.
  11. ^ Cohn, Jesse (2006). Anarchism and the Crisis of Representation. Selinsgrove Pa.: Susquehanna University Press. p. 207. ISBN 978-1575911052.
  12. ^ Graeber, David (2007). "The Twilight of Vanguardism". In Macphee, Josh (ed.). Realizing the Impossible. Stirling: AK Press. ISBN 978-1904859321.
  13. ^ Antliff, Allan (2004). Only a Beginning. Arsenal Pulp Press. p. 99. ISBN 978-1551521671.
  14. ^ Tucker, Benjamin R., "State Socialism and Anarchism 1999-01-17 at the Wayback Machine", Individual Liberty, Vanguard Press, New York, 1926
  15. ^ a b Jarach, Lawrence (Winter 2002–2003). "Anarcho-Communists, Platformism, and Dual Power: Innovation or Travesty?". Anarchy: A Journal of Desire Armed (54). Retrieved 2008-08-02.
  16. ^ Molyneux, Stefan (October 24, 2005). "The Stateless Society". LewRockwell.com. Retrieved 2008-08-02.
  17. ^ Starr, Amory (May 2006). "' (Excepting Barricades Erected to Prevent Us from Peacefully Assembling)': So-called 'Violence' in the Global North Alterglobalization Movement". Social Movement Studies. 5 (1): 61–81. doi:10.1080/14742830600621233. ISSN 1474-2837. S2CID 146798880.
  18. ^ Dubrawsky, Ido (2007). How to Cheat at Securing Your Network. Syngress. p. 50. ISBN 978-1597492317.
  19. ^ Feyerabend, Paul (1993). Against Method. London: Verso. ISBN 9780860916468.
  20. ^ Levinson, David, ed. (2004). Encyclopedia of Homelessness. Thousand Oaks. p. 286. ISBN 978-0761927518.
  21. ^ Graziosi, Andrea (1996). The Great Soviet Peasant War: Bolsheviks and Peasants, 1917–1933. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-916458-83-6. OCLC 40684852.
  22. ^ Kurutz, Steven (June 21, 2007). "Not Buying It". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-06-21. the small but growing subculture of anticonsumerists who call themselves freegans — the term derives from vegans, the vegetarians who forsake all animal products, as many freegans also do
  23. ^ Zweig, Ferdynand (1934). The Economics of Consumers' Credit. London: P. S. King & Son. p. 7. OCLC 5358381.
  24. ^ Logs : micro-fondements d'émancipation sociale et artistique. Maisons-Alfort, France : Ére, [2005- ]. ISBN 2-915453-04-7 OCLC 60370621 p.20
  25. ^ Notes from Nowhere (2003). We Are Everywhere. London: Verso. p. 150. ISBN 978-1859844472.
  26. ^ Foner, Philip S., ed. (1969). The Autobiographies of the Haymarket Martyrs. New York: Pathfinder Press. p. 13. ISBN 978-0873488792.
  27. ^ Sitrin, Marina (2006). Horizontalism. Stirling: AK Press. ISBN 978-1904859581.
  28. ^ a b Parry, Richard (1987). "From illegality to illegalism". The Bonnot Gang. London: Rebel Press. p. 15. ISBN 978-0946061044.
  29. ^ Bey, Hakim (1994). Immediatism. AK Press. ISBN 978-1873176429.
  30. ^ Armstrong-Myers, Katy (1989). "Review of THE BONNOT GANG". Socialist Lawyer (9): 20. ISSN 0954-3635. JSTOR 42950027.
  31. ^ Filippo, Roy (2003). A New World in Our Hearts. Stirling: AK Press. p. 69. ISBN 978-1902593616.
  32. ^ Curran, James (2003). Contesting Media Power. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 57. ISBN 978-0742523852.
  33. ^ Clark, John P. (2004). Anarchy, Geography, Modernity. Lexington: Lexington Books. pp. 63–64. ISBN 978-0739108055.
  34. ^ Williams, P. (2001). "Transnational Criminal Networks" (PDF). Networks and Netwars: The Future of Terror, Crime, and Militancy. Retrieved 2008-06-23.
  35. ^ Woodcock, George (2004). Anarchism: a History of Libertarian Ideas and Movements. Peterborough: Broadview Press. p. 371. ISBN 978-1551116297.
  36. ^ Morris, Brian (2014). "The Political Legacy of Murray Bookchin". Anthropology, Ecology, and Anarchism: A Brian Morris Reader. PM Press. pp. 169–170. ISBN 978-1-60486-986-6.[permanent dead link]
  37. ^ Brennan, Elizabeth (1998). Who's Who of Pulitzer Prize Winners. Phoenix: Oryx Press. p. 257. ISBN 978-1573561112.
  38. ^ Arquilla, J.; Ronfeldt, D. (1996). The Advent of Netwar. RAND Corporation. ISBN 978-0833024145.
  39. ^ Recipes for Disaster, p. 241
  40. ^ "Glossary of Terms, part IV". Rolling Thunder (4): 6–8. Spring 2007.
  41. ^ Friedman, Patri (14 April 2008). "A Brief Introduction to the Seasteading Institute". Seasteading.org. Seasteading Institute. Retrieved 2008-06-23.
  42. ^ Friedman, Patri. "Hakim Bey on Permanent Autonomous Zones". Seasteading.org. Seasteading Institute. Retrieved 2008-06-23.
  43. ^ Starr, Amory; Fernandez, Luis A.; Scholl, Christian (2011). Shutting Down the Streets: Political Violence and Social Control in the Global Era. NYU Press. pp. 114, 142. ISBN 9780814741009. Retrieved 4 May 2019.; Anonymous (2005). Recipes for Disaster. Crimethinc.Workers Collective. p. 461. ISBN 978-0970910141.
  44. ^ Stover, Leon (1987). Robert A. Heinlein. Boston: Twayne Publishers. ISBN 978-0805775099.
  45. ^ Bookchin, Murray (1997). The Spanish Anarchists. Stirling: AK Press. p. 129. ISBN 978-1873176047.
  46. ^ Jean Maitron, Le mouvement anarchiste en France, Tel Gallimard (first ed. François Maspero, 1975), tome I, chapter VI, "Le Procès des Trente. Fin d'une époque", pp.251-261
  47. ^ . The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Houghton Mifflin Company. Archived from the original on 2009-02-08. Retrieved 2008-09-18.
  48. ^ Malachowski, Alan (2001). Business Ethics. New York: Routledge. pp. 98–99. ISBN 978-0415184625.
  49. ^ Taras, Ray (1984). Ideology in a Socialist State. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 89–92. ISBN 978-0521262712.
  50. ^ Gorightly, Adam (2003). The Prankster and the Conspiracy. Paraview Press. p. 155. ISBN 978-1931044660.

glossary, anarchism, this, dynamic, list, never, able, satisfy, particular, standards, completeness, help, adding, missing, items, with, reliable, sources, following, list, terms, specific, anarchists, anarchism, political, social, movement, which, advocates, . This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources The following is a list of terms specific to anarchists Anarchism is a political and social movement which advocates voluntary association in opposition to authoritarianism and hierarchy Contents A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y ZA editAcracy The negation of rule or government by none While anarchy refers to the absence of a hierarchical society organizing power principle acracy refers to the absence of coercion the condition of acracy is one of voluntary order Derived from the Greek a no and kratia system of government Adhocracy A form of organic organization according to which different parts of an organization are temporarily assembled to meet the requirements of that particular point in time 1 Affinity group A small non hierarchical collective of individuals who collaborate on direct action via consensus decision making 2 Anarch Coined by Ernst Junger this refers to the ruler i e individual in a state of anarchy analogous to the monarch in a state of monarchy a conception influenced by Max Stirner s notion of the sovereign individual 3 Anarchism without adjectives A form of anarchism which does not declare affiliation with any specific subtype of anarchism as may be suffixed to anarcho or anarcha instead positioning itself as pluralistic tolerant of all anarchist schools of thought 4 Anarchy Derived from the Ancient Greek ἀn without ἄrxein to rule without archons without rulers 5 Anomie Social disorder and civil war in an absence of government used to separate anarchy as in social order and absence of government Ansoc Clipping of anarcho socialism and or anarcho socialist used in informal discourse particularly in blogs or other internet forums Anti systemic library A library which is not organised hierarchically and that has no catalogue The concept is influenced by the ideas of the Situationists Autonomism A set of radical left wing political movements in Western Europe which emerged in the late 20th century Archon A Greek word meaning ruler the absence of archons and archy rule defines a state of anarchy Derived from the Ancient Greek arxwn pl arxontes B editBiennio rosso The two red years of political agitation strikes and land occupation by Italian workers in 1919 and 1920 6 Black anarchism A political philosophy primarily of African Americans opposed to what it sees as the oppression of people of colour by the white ruling class through the power of the state 7 Black bloc An affinity group or cluster of affinity groups that assembles during protests demonstrations or other forms of direct action Black blocs are noted for the distinctive all black clothing worn by members to conceal their identity and for their intentional defiance of state property law 8 9 Bourse du Travail A distinctively French form of working class organization of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries bourses du travail promoted mutual aid education and self organization amongst their members 10 C editConsensus decision making A participatory decision making process for collectives that seeks the resolution or mitigation of minority objections according to the principle of inclusivity as well as the agreement of the majority of participants 11 12 13 Cost the limit of price A maxim coined by individualist anarchist Josiah Warren 1798 1874 to express a normative conception of the labor theory of value that is that the price of a good or service should never exceed its cost 14 Counter economics Abbreviation of counter establishment economics a concept in agorist theory of the use and advocacy of black and grey markets and the underground economy to erode the moral authority of and the perceived necessity for the state D edit When a revolutionary situation develops counter institutions have the potential of functioning as a real alternative to the existing structure and reliance on them becomes as normal as reliance on the old authoritarian institutions This is when counter institutions constitute dual power Dual power is a state of affairs in which people have created institutions that fulfill all the useful functions formerly provided by the state The creation of a general state of dual power is a necessary requirement for a successful revolution Love and Rage Love amp Rage Revolutionary Anarchist Federation New York Local Member Handbook June 1997 15 Dispute resolution organization DRO A private or possibly cooperative organization specialized in resolving disputes that would arise in an anarchical society similar to a PDA 16 Diversity of tactics A united front of solidarity between participants who disagree on specific choice of tactics For instance during a protest action demonstrators can create zones with varying degrees of tactical risk rather than imposing a single code 17 Dual power The concept of revolution through the creation of counter institutions in place of and in opposition to state power 15 Used in anarcho communist discourse it is distinct from the earlier use of the phrase by non anarchist communists such as Vladimir Lenin Dumpster diving Physically searching through the discarded belongings in a dumpster or other trash receptacle with the intention of salvaging useful material such as food or information 18 E editEpistemological anarchism A theory in the philosophy of science advanced by Paul Feyerabend which holds that there are no useful and exception free rules governing the progress of science and that the pragmatic approach is a Dadaistic anything goes attitude of methodological pluralism 19 F editFood rescue The practice of retrieving edible food that would otherwise go to waste and distributing it to those in need 20 Free school A decentralized network in which skills information and knowledge are shared with neither the social hierarchy nor the institutional environment of formal schooling Free soviets Following the Russian Revolution the concept of workers councils soviets that were self governing and free from party control 21 Freeganism An anti consumerist lifestyle according to which participants attempt to restrict their consumption of natural resources and participation in the conventional economy to using salvaged and discarded goods 22 Freigeld A monetary system in the Freiwirtschaft theory according to which units of currency retain their value or lose it at a certain rate making inflation and profiting from interest impossible Freigeld is a German phrase with the literal meaning free money 23 G editGive away shop Second hand stores where all goods are free An example of a gift economy 24 Guerrilla gardening Nonviolent direct action whereby disused plots are converted to gardens without seeking the permission of the putative property owners 25 Related squatting H editHaymarket Martyrs The seven anarchists tried and executed for the murder of a Chicago policeman during the Haymarket affair 26 Haymarket Tragedy See Haymarket Martyrs Hierarchy See social hierarchy Horizontalidad also Horizontalism A form of non hierarchical social organization which utilises direct democracy and consensus decision making 27 I edit nbsp Interior of the Left Bank Books infoshop in Seattle Washington in 2006 An infoshop is a nexus for information exchange among anarchists Illegalism A doctrine which rejects all moral obligations and governmental law in favour of the satisfaction of one s own desires 28 Pioneered by the Bonnot Gang in France and heavily influenced by the individualist anarchist philosophy of Max Stirner 28 Immediatism A philosophy which demands the embracing of immediate social interactions with people as a means of countering the antisocial consequences of consumerist capitalism 29 Individual reclamation reprise individuelle A form of direct action that advocates for criminal acts in service of a cause Influenced by Bolshevik theory 30 Infoshop A space often a social center that serves as a node for anarchists involved with radical movements and countercultures for trading publications typically books zines stickers and posters meeting and networking with similar individuals and groups 31 The primary directive of an infoshop is the dissemination of information 32 Related zine library Invisible dictatorship A vanguardist organisation of revolutionaries first proposed by Mikhail Bakunin 33 J editJurisdictional arbitrage Exploitation of differences in national laws and regulations 34 to maximise liberty Related dynamic geography panarchism K editKabouters Dutch anarchists influenced by Peter Kropotkin who sought to promote awareness of alternatives to authoritarian and capitalist solutions to social problems in 1960s Amsterdam 35 L editLand and liberty For other uses see Land and liberty disambiguation A slogan expressing the desire of freedom from landowners originally used by the revolutionary leaders of the Mexican Revolution Spanish Tierra y Libertad Russian Zemlya i Volya Zemlya i Volya Law of equal liberty A doctrine asserting that each individual has the right to assert their fullest liberty to act so long as it does not extend them greater liberty than any other individual Named by Herbert Spencer Lifestylism Anarchists who prioritize cultural and identity protest over class struggle politics Associated with Murray Bookchin s 1995 essay in pejorative reference to anarcho primitivists poststructural anarchists and individualists egoists 36 Lois scelerates A pejorative term for a set of French laws passed during 1893 1894 restricting the freedom of the anarchist press in the aftermath of an outbreak of propaganda of the deed M edit nbsp The Modern School in New York City circa 1911 12 Anarchist philosopher and radical historian Will Durant stands on the steps with his pupils Makhnovshchina Mass movement to establish anarchist communism in Ukraine led by the Ukrainian anarchist revolutionary Nestor Makhno 1888 1934 and his followers in the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine Modern School American schools formed in the early 20th century based on the ideas of educator and anarchist Francesc Ferrer i Guardia and modelled after his Escuela Moderna 37 Mutual aid The voluntary reciprocal exchange of resources and services for mutual benefit Related gift economy voluntarism N editNetwar Low intensity social conflict employing a network structure for organisational control and communication 38 Related Security culture Non aggression Principle NAP also Non aggression Axiom A prohibition against the initiation of force or the threat of force against persons or property usually referred to as aggression or coercion P editPanarchy political philosophy Main article Panarchy political philosophy Participatory politics Main article Participatory politics Polycentric law Main article Polycentric law Popular assembly Main article Popular assembly Post left Main article Post left anarchy Prefigurative politics Main article Prefigurative politics Primitivist Used interchangeably with anarcho primitivist Propaganda of the deed Main article Propaganda of the deed Property is theft Main article Property is theft Provo Main article Provo movement Punk house Main article Punk houseR editRadical cheerleading Main article Radical cheerleading Really Really Free Market A free market based on the principle of gift economics whereby participants bring gifts and resources to share with one another without money being exchanged 39 Related participatory economics voluntary association Refusal of work Main article Refusal of work Responsible autonomy Main article Responsible autonomy Revolutionary spontaneity Main article Revolutionary spontaneity Rewilding Main article Rewilding conservation biology Reprise individuelle Main article Individual reclamationS editSamizdat the production of literature banned by the former communist governments of eastern Europe the term is a play on the term for the Soviet state press and translates to self publishing Throughout the greater part of the twentieth century the best literature philosophy and history in the Soviet Union and its satellite states was copied by photo reproduction and distributed through underground channels just as it is here in the United States today Rolling Thunder Issue 4 40 Seasteading The creation of permanent dwellings on the ocean analogous to homesteading on land A seastead is a structure meant for permanent occupation on the ocean 41 Related to Permanent Autonomous Zones 42 Security culture Secrecy practiced by an affinity group which engages in illegal activities and its precautions to avoid surveillance or infiltration by law enforcement 43 Related direct action netwar Social center Main article Social center Social ecology Main article Social ecology theory Social hierarchy Main article Social hierarchy Social revolution Main article Social revolution Somatherapy Main article Somatherapy Spokescouncil Main article Spokescouncil Spontaneous order Main article Spontaneous order Street reclamation Main article Street reclamation Swaraj Main article SwarajT editTANSTAAFL Acronym coined by libertarian science fiction writer Robert A Heinlein in The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress for There Ain t No Such Thing As A Free Lunch Used to express scepticism towards socialist economics 44 Tragic Week The name given to a series of violent confrontations between the Spanish army and the anarchist backed working classes in Catalunyan cities from July 25 August 2 1909 45 Trial of the thirty A show trial in 1894 in Paris aimed at legitimizing the lois scelerates passed in 1893 1894 against the French anarchist movement and at restricting press freedom by proving the existence of an effective association between anarchists 46 French Proces des trenteV editVeganarchism The political philosophy of veganism more specifically animal liberation and anarchism creating a combined praxis as a means for social revolution Voluntarism The use of or reliance on voluntary action to maintain an institution carry out a policy or achieve an end 47 Voluntaryism A political philosophy which advocates voluntary association as the foundation of society and opposes coercion and aggression W edit nbsp The abolition of wage slavery has been a stated goal of unions like the Industrial Workers of the World Wage slavery A term which asserts a similarity between slavery the ownership and control of one person by another and wage labour 48 Workers self management A form of workplace decision making in which the workers rather than professional managers decide on issues related to the operation of the business 49 Z editZenarchy Compound of zen and archy The social order which arises from meditation As a doctrine zenarchism is the belief that universal enlightenment is a prerequisite to the abolition of the state 50 Zine A low circulation non commercial periodical of original or appropriated texts and images Usually reproduced via photocopier on a variety of colored paper stock Zine library A repository of zines and other associated artifacts such as small press books Zine libraries are typically run on a minimal budget and have a close association with infoshops and other forms of DIY culture and independent media See also edit nbsp Anarchism portal nbsp For a list of words relating to Anarchism see the Anarchism category of words in Wiktionary the free dictionary List of basic anarchism topicsReferences edit Alvesson Mats 1995 Management of Knowledge Intensive Companies Walter De Gruyter Inc p 93 ISBN 978 3110128659 Recipes for Disaster p 28 31 Warrior Waldganger Anarch An essay on Ernst Junger s concept of the sovereign individual Archived 2008 06 09 at the Wayback Machine by Abdalbarr Braun Retrieved 22 December 2007 Esenwein George Richard Anarchist Ideology and the Working Class Movement in Spain 1868 1898 p 135 Anarchy Merriam Webster s Online dictionary Macdonald Hamish 1998 Mussolini and Italian Fascism Trans Atlantic Publications p 17 ISBN 978 0748733866 Daquan Bridger 2007 Delusion Addiction Trafford Publishing p 118 ISBN 978 1425117696 Blocs Black and Otherwise Crimethinc com CrimethInc 20 November 2003 Retrieved 2008 08 05 ACME Collective A communique from one section of the black bloc of N30 in Seattle Ogg Frederic Austin 1917 Economic development of modern Europe New York The Macmillan company p 464 OCLC 603770 Cohn Jesse 2006 Anarchism and the Crisis of Representation Selinsgrove Pa Susquehanna University Press p 207 ISBN 978 1575911052 Graeber David 2007 The Twilight of Vanguardism In Macphee Josh ed Realizing the Impossible Stirling AK Press ISBN 978 1904859321 Antliff Allan 2004 Only a Beginning Arsenal Pulp Press p 99 ISBN 978 1551521671 Tucker Benjamin R State Socialism and Anarchism Archived 1999 01 17 at the Wayback Machine Individual Liberty Vanguard Press New York 1926 a b Jarach Lawrence Winter 2002 2003 Anarcho Communists Platformism and Dual Power Innovation or Travesty Anarchy A Journal of Desire Armed 54 Retrieved 2008 08 02 Molyneux Stefan October 24 2005 The Stateless Society LewRockwell com Retrieved 2008 08 02 Starr Amory May 2006 Excepting Barricades Erected to Prevent Us from Peacefully Assembling So called Violence in the Global North Alterglobalization Movement Social Movement Studies 5 1 61 81 doi 10 1080 14742830600621233 ISSN 1474 2837 S2CID 146798880 Dubrawsky Ido 2007 How to Cheat at Securing Your Network Syngress p 50 ISBN 978 1597492317 Feyerabend Paul 1993 Against Method London Verso ISBN 9780860916468 Levinson David ed 2004 Encyclopedia of Homelessness Thousand Oaks p 286 ISBN 978 0761927518 Graziosi Andrea 1996 The Great Soviet Peasant War Bolsheviks and Peasants 1917 1933 Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press p 25 ISBN 978 0 916458 83 6 OCLC 40684852 Kurutz Steven June 21 2007 Not Buying It The New York Times Retrieved 2007 06 21 the small but growing subculture of anticonsumerists who call themselves freegans the term derives from vegans the vegetarians who forsake all animal products as many freegans also do Zweig Ferdynand 1934 The Economics of Consumers Credit London P S King amp Son p 7 OCLC 5358381 Logs micro fondements d emancipation sociale et artistique Maisons Alfort France Ere 2005 ISBN 2 915453 04 7 OCLC 60370621 p 20 Notes from Nowhere 2003 We Are Everywhere London Verso p 150 ISBN 978 1859844472 Foner Philip S ed 1969 The Autobiographies of the Haymarket Martyrs New York Pathfinder Press p 13 ISBN 978 0873488792 Sitrin Marina 2006 Horizontalism Stirling AK Press ISBN 978 1904859581 a b Parry Richard 1987 From illegality to illegalism The Bonnot Gang London Rebel Press p 15 ISBN 978 0946061044 Bey Hakim 1994 Immediatism AK Press ISBN 978 1873176429 Armstrong Myers Katy 1989 Review of THE BONNOT GANG Socialist Lawyer 9 20 ISSN 0954 3635 JSTOR 42950027 Filippo Roy 2003 A New World in Our Hearts Stirling AK Press p 69 ISBN 978 1902593616 Curran James 2003 Contesting Media Power Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield p 57 ISBN 978 0742523852 Clark John P 2004 Anarchy Geography Modernity Lexington Lexington Books pp 63 64 ISBN 978 0739108055 Williams P 2001 Transnational Criminal Networks PDF Networks and Netwars The Future of Terror Crime and Militancy Retrieved 2008 06 23 Woodcock George 2004 Anarchism a History of Libertarian Ideas and Movements Peterborough Broadview Press p 371 ISBN 978 1551116297 Morris Brian 2014 The Political Legacy of Murray Bookchin Anthropology Ecology and Anarchism A Brian Morris Reader PM Press pp 169 170 ISBN 978 1 60486 986 6 permanent dead link Brennan Elizabeth 1998 Who s Who of Pulitzer Prize Winners Phoenix Oryx Press p 257 ISBN 978 1573561112 Arquilla J Ronfeldt D 1996 The Advent of Netwar RAND Corporation ISBN 978 0833024145 Recipes for Disaster p 241 Glossary of Terms part IV Rolling Thunder 4 6 8 Spring 2007 Friedman Patri 14 April 2008 A Brief Introduction to the Seasteading Institute Seasteading org Seasteading Institute Retrieved 2008 06 23 Friedman Patri Hakim Bey on Permanent Autonomous Zones Seasteading org Seasteading Institute Retrieved 2008 06 23 Starr Amory Fernandez Luis A Scholl Christian 2011 Shutting Down the Streets Political Violence and Social Control in the Global Era NYU Press pp 114 142 ISBN 9780814741009 Retrieved 4 May 2019 Anonymous 2005 Recipes for Disaster Crimethinc Workers Collective p 461 ISBN 978 0970910141 Stover Leon 1987 Robert A Heinlein Boston Twayne Publishers ISBN 978 0805775099 Bookchin Murray 1997 The Spanish Anarchists Stirling AK Press p 129 ISBN 978 1873176047 Jean Maitron Le mouvement anarchiste en France Tel Gallimard first ed Francois Maspero 1975 tome I chapter VI Le Proces des Trente Fin d une epoque pp 251 261 Voluntarism The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language Fourth Edition Houghton Mifflin Company Archived from the original on 2009 02 08 Retrieved 2008 09 18 Malachowski Alan 2001 Business Ethics New York Routledge pp 98 99 ISBN 978 0415184625 Taras Ray 1984 Ideology in a Socialist State Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 89 92 ISBN 978 0521262712 Gorightly Adam 2003 The Prankster and the Conspiracy Paraview Press p 155 ISBN 978 1931044660 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Glossary of anarchism amp oldid 1214708503, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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